Comments on: PSP no one-trick pony
Sony's slick gaming machine hits the North American market this week. Will it conquer?![]()
Photos: PSP heads stateside
Sony's slick gaming machine hits the North American market this week. Will it conquer?![]()
Photos: PSP heads stateside
January 4, 2010 4:00 AM PST
January 4, 2010 4:00 AM PST
January 4, 2010 4:00 AM PST
Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Related quotes
what a joke.
Again who cares. Most gaming consoles have always been proprietary. Unless you are ******** about it because you can't pirate games it shouldn't be a big deal.
1. Drop the bundle crap.
2. Drop the price to $199
3. Bundle one game in with the system.
Until then screw you.
PS- If you think the American public is going to purchase movies that ONLY play in a PSP you all are on crack.
gba has some cartoon shows on theres, and i've seen people buy them, so why not movies?
I mean, this thing costs as much as an iPod! Are you on crack?
If you have a problem with the price - you probably have a problem with anything that costs $250. In other words you don't have $250.
Just.. too expensive for this gamer at the moment. I'm going to hedge my bets for a short bit anyway because the Japanese PSP was riddled with tech problems after it's release - from faulty analog sticks to square button problems and the UMD randomly being ejected. According to Nikkei Business, through Feb. 05, 6% of all of the Japanese PSPs have been returned for defects - that's 48,000 of the 800,000 sold thru Feb. (Sources: OPM Issue 91, Nikkei Business)
I remember the original PS2 fiasco... When Sony misjudged demand and people stood in line for hours hoping to get their PS2. Then a few weeks went by and all of the sudden their PS2 wouldn't play blue-backed (CD-ROM) disks. Flash forward to the PStwo redesign and Sony had the same problems - they misjudged demand and a manufacturing problem in the first run caused them to halt production temporarily to fix it, making their console all but unavailable for the 2004 holiday season.
Given their track record, even though I love my PS2, I am going to wait this one out for a while to make sure the problems have been ironed out (at least mostly, nothing will ever be 'flawless') and for a better library of games (not many launch title games appeal to me, most of the games that are being drooled over aren't coming until mid-April anyway).
But no, I don't plan on watching UMD movies, nor do I plan on converting movies to files on a memory stick like OPM suggested. While Sony may think it's there, I, personally, don't see much practical "convergence" in this digital device.
(BTW, since you make such a funny comment, you are more screwed than we are :D)
vendors seeking to push this format. Sony isn't making any money on the PSP, like most console makers, it is the games where they make all their money. Sony got out of the PDA market knowing that the PSP would be it's "answer". It is a shame that there isn't more game development from the big game makers (EA, Ubisoft, etc.)in the PDA market.
As of today my PDA can do the following:Wireless internet, Office apps (word, excel, PP, access,etc.),VOIP, PIM, GPS, Games, photos, movies, music, take photos(1.3mp), ebooks and a whole lot more given the abount of software available.
And final case in point. A PSP emulator will be out soon. So that I can play all those PSP games as well.LOL
Not legally, you can't. And if you think piracy is funny, you have a lot of growing up to do.
PS- Also I have yet to see ANY PDA with a screen as nice as the PSP. There simply isn?t anything out there that compares.
As others have posted, in terms of gaming and battery life, the PSP smokes every PDA.
The DS is closer to a PDA.
1. Pressing on the Right pad button, or the Square button, results in you actually putting pressure on the TFT screen itself. If Sony had increased the size of the unit by a couple centimetres, this wouldn't be a problem.
2. UMD discs ejecting in the middle of play for no reason. This has been admitted by Sony to be a problem which they "would fix", but I have seen no mentions of a fix anywhere.
3. Occasional lock-ups. My guess is heat-related, since the UMDs actually spin much like a CDROM, generating heat and general chaos inside of such a small unit.
Pretty sad bugs for such an expensive device. Am I telling you to go get a GBA DS? Hardly -- the DS is an amazing gimmick device (nice to see Nintendo focusing on such DOT-COM-like garbage...).
Anyways, my advice to potential buyers of the PSP is to wait. The price is bound to go down, the "bundle" package will sooner or later be thwarted, quantities will become available, and -- hopefully -- Sony will release a 2nd-generation version or updated model which will address the hardware flaws in question.
Once again, proof that there isn't enough QA -- or possibly, DECENT QA -- in today's technologically-savvy society.
There was an interview with some head honcho from SCEA - I can't remember if it's in OPM 91 or if I saw it on IGN - who already said they are going to be bringing out the less-expensive basic bundle out a few months after the original "value bundle" debut.
Since they already committed to these odd formats, the more devices they show up in, the less odd they will be.
Will PSP be the next big platform, or just an isolated technological curiosity?
It will be interesting to see how Sony handles this, and if they can grow the platform.
- thank you
- by March 28, 2005 5:20 PM PST
- 5ft
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(50 Comments)